[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=25372911#p25372911:zb3dk5z5 said:
redleader[/url]":zb3dk5z5]I don't think you understood my post. I'm not saying infinite numbers of cars can occupy a volume. I'm just pointing out that the transport capacity per unit of area tends to be tremendously higher for roads than for trains because of the practical challenges of fitting a very large number of trains per area (extreme cost, difficulty of making overlapping subway tunnels, routing around building foundations, need for relatively large gaps between adjacent trains per tunnel, space used for stations, etc). For this reason, even in dense cities with extensive train systems, the road capacity of the city is generally far higher than the rail capacity.
I see what you're saying now, but I think you worded it poorly--roads never have a higher capacity per unit area
of infrastructure. They might manage higher capacity over a general area given some cost constraints, but that's a different metric. I (mis)interpreted "
density per square km" to be referring to the first metric, not the second.
For a given square kilometer, building a train to it is massively better than building a highway there. The problem--and the point you were making, which I get--is that you can't build a train to serve every square kilometer. But the limiting factor there is cost (specifically, cost that doesn't scale linearly with increased capacity), not capacity/area.
The reason that the road capacity of a dense city is higher than its rail capacity is because a huge proportion of the city's area is used on roads (and tons of parking, but in the autonomous-car future we can get rid of some of that parking). In terms of capacity/area-of-transit-infrastructure, rail is clearly better, and that doesn't really change with self-driving cars.
and":zb3dk5z5 said:
Yes, but this is actually quite small relative to total city capacity because that subway tunnel serves an enormous area with many thousands of roads. A city with even a moderately comprehensive bus system for instance will typically match or even exceed the subway ridership with buses alone. Nevermind that the vast majority of road traffic is not buses.
Sure, and buses (self-driving or not) are much higher-capacity than self-driving cars. I like buses just fine--I'm advocating for mass transit in general, not specifically trains. Trains just represent one end of the (currently available) spectrum. Very high initial investment gets you very high efficiency and capacity, and allows for high population density.
Subway ridership isn't the same as subway capacity, for what it's worth. An underused subway is akin to an empty highway--maybe a failure in city planning, or perhaps overbuilding for future growth.
Honestly I'm not really sure what we're arguing about at this point. A system of thousands of roads and hundreds of buses will have a higher transit capacity than some small number of subway lines, sure. Those roads manage such a high capacity by taking up a lot of space, and they don't come all that cheaply either.
and":zb3dk5z5 said:
I don't think anyone is saying that public transit is obsolete?
I don't know. In mass-transit threads there is often a post or two that brings up self-driving cars as if they obviate the need for investment in transit infrastructure. In this thread, there seemed to be the sentiment that self-driving cars allow for all these magical changes in our society--the point I was trying to make is that those changes are possible now, and the primary barrier is cultural rather than technological. We shouldn't punt on trying to make these changes just because we lack some particular technology.
Shorter version: if you want a car-free or low-car-usage society, you should be advocating for lots of mass transit now,
and self-driving cars in the future, rather than just waiting for self-driving cars.
and":zb3dk5z5 said:
Yes we do. While I understand that you like trains, they have extreme cost issues and more moderate issues with transit time and capacity. Furthermore, as a city becomes larger, these issues become more acute because of the difficulty of expanding capacity. If voters cared more about transmit, that would be great, but it won't bend a cost curve.
The cost issues are mostly a matter of sticker shock--infrastructure projects need to be evaluated on decade-long timeframes, and these projects look fine with that perspective*. Transit planning operates on a similar timeframe, in that they must try to project usage needs decades in advance, to try to head off the need to expand capacity. Really, filling your transit system to capacity is a sign that it was a
fantastic investment, but people seem to forget that and have another round of sticker shock when asked to make a similar investment again.
Expanding road capacity in a dense area is no picnic either. In fact it can be even more difficult because roads have lower efficiency per unit area and you start out with so many of them--adding a highway lane is a trivial capacity increase at a huge cost, while adding a rail line is a large increase at a huge cost.
* Excluding cases of gross mismanagement, to which highways are just as vulnerable.